… White House officials late Monday night disputed that the document is an analysis of the bill’s coverage effects. Instead, they say it was an attempt by the OMB to predict what CBO’s scorekeepers would conclude about the GOP repeal plan…

According to documents viewed by POLITICO, the OMB analysis intended to assess the coverage and spending outcomes of the legislation.

The analysis found that under the American Health Care Act, the coverage losses would include 17 million for Medicaid, 6 million in the individual market and 3 million in employer-based plans.

A total of 54 million individuals would be uninsured in 2026 under the GOP plan, according to this White House analysis. That’s nearly double the number projected under current law…

Last week, several Republican senators, expressing doubt about CBO estimates, said OMB was expected to issue its own estimates of the plan.

“We disagree strenuously with the report that was put out,” Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price told reporters Monday about the CBO after leaving a Cabinet meeting with President Donald Trump at the White House. “It’s just not believable is what we would suggest.” Price, while serving as the House Budget Committee chairman, had a role in appointing the current head of the CBO, a conservative economist…

TrumpRyanCare is stunningly badly crafted, and is hated on the right, left and center. So why is it even alive? I know, tax cuts! But even that doesn’t really explain the mania.

Overnight I was wondering if the Banon wing of the WH operation was setting up Ryan for a death-blow to his career (Breitfart attacks fit this theory), and that the big Trump rescue will be Medicare for all, rammed past the GOP in a final, fracturing explosion of the current political duality.

Then I woke up and felt as depressed and shitty about American politics as one really probably can.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson used an email alias to discuss issues related to climate change while he was an executive at ExxonMobil, according to the New York attorney general.

Attorney General Eric Scheiderman made the claim in a letter Monday asking a New York state judge to enforce a subpoena for documents in the state’s probe into whether Exxon misled investors about what it knew about climate change and its impact on the company.

“OAG found that Exxon’s former Chairman and CEO, Rex Wayne Tillerson, utilized an alias email address on the Exxon system under the pseudonym ‘Wayne Tracker’ from at least 2008 through 2015,” John Oleske, a lawyer in Schneiderman’s office, wrote in the letter. “Mr. Tillerson used this secondary email address to send and receive materials regarding important matters, including those concerning to the risk-management issues related to climate change that are the focus of OAG’s investigation.”

Oleske wrote that Exxon included emails from the “Wayne Tracker” account in documents provided to the attorney general, although Exxon had not previously disclosed that Tillerson used an additional email account while he was there.

Schniederman’s office also complained that the documents Exxon recently submitted did not completely fulfill the state’s request.

Exxon acknowledged in a statement to the Wall Street Journal that the “Wayne Tracker” email does exist.

@Raoul: For six or seven years, Republicans promised to repeal and/or replace the ACA. They knew that they never had to craft a replacement bill because Obama would veto every attempt to repeal (so replacement never got to the table). Now, they are the dog that caught the car (as I believe Erza Klein called them recently) – they don’t know what to do. But they know they have to do something after so much time of promising to repeal and/or replace… the problem is, there’s no good option out there for them. Even the one that many of them believe, which is that the federal government little to no role in providing health insurance to individuals, is a nonstarter because most of them would get drummed out of office in their next election. Nor does it help that Obamacare is basically a federal version of Romneycare in Massachusetts which was a state version of the Republican plan in the 90s to counter Hillarycare. So, to cross my metaphors, they’ve painted themselves into a corner.

@Baud: That was last week. This week in “can’t find their asses with both hands”, it’s opposition week!

@p.a.: Good point. But Banon, while evil and not well versed in the ways of legislating on Capitol Hill, is not stupid. And Reince, while a chinless quivver of enabling shit, does know his way around D.C.
So, I’d say the clusterfuck is at the senior staff level. That the figurehead is Max Headroom stupid doesn’t matter that much.

Dent told CNN that rolling back the Medicaid expansion before 2020 — which conservatives have been asking the White House to do — would be a “non-starter”…An emerging concern from House moderates is they could be asked to walk the plank on a health care bill that doesn’t have a chance of passing the Senate in the first place. Dent compared it to the 1993 fight over the so-called BTU energy tax under President Bill Clinton where House Democrats supported the controversial tax only for it to die in the Senate. The vote hurt Democrats who lost control of Congress the following year.

See, it’s not about the people on Medicaid or how soon the GOP gives them the shaft. It’s about smoothing Dent’s re-election bid in 2018.

Glad to see the breakdown of who would lose coverage. I have been getting the sense that the Republicans are trying to imply that most of those losing coverage are the young people who don’t want insurance because it is cheaper to pay for health care out of pocket, so they see Obamacare as unfair to them. But 17 million in Medicaid, 3 million in employer coverage and only 6 million individuals makes it pretty clear that that is not true.

I’m getting really sick of seeing people talk about how “Obamacare is Republican!” The GOP has changed so much in the last 50 years that’s like saying that if Lincoln were alive today he’d be kicking the Democrats out of their southern stronghold. Feh!

A NYTimes reporter is coming to our county to interview people who benefited from the Medicaid expansion. I’m contacting one of the people I know for a possible interview. I don’t know if she’ll do it.

She’s a little bit mean, so I will tell her to be nice to the reporter :)

White House press secretary Sean Spicer told reporters last week, “When we get asked the question, ‘How many people are going to get covered?’ that’s not the question that should be asked.” Pressed on the merits of the bill by George Stephanopoulos on ABC’s This Week, Office of Management and Budget director Mick Mulvaney shot back, “You’re worried about getting people covered.” As if that’s a woeful mistake.

@Major Major Major Major: I agree with your sentiment, but we do need to acknowledge that PPACA is a market-based, less-than-full-coverage compromise that didn’t really fulfill many progressives goals for health care.
Maybe it really was all that could get thru in the modern era, but it wasn’t IMO a deeply Democratic or Progressive plan!

@Baud: The Times had a piece today that had “Obamacare is Republican!” as one of its central points, arguing that, basically, the fundamental structure of the bill was designed so that Susan Collins would vote for it which is why Republicans are stuck with it. It’s so dumb. I hate it. As somebody who actually paid attention to the process… it’s amazing how many people who are paid to write about it apparently didn’t.

ETA: There is no Republican alternative to Obamacare not because Obamacare is the Republican alternative but because Republicans aren’t interested in providing a solution to the problem in the first place. This is a very important distinction, calling Obamacare a Republican bill ignores it.

That part is, I think, ideological. What they’re most afraid of is health care as a right. That’s been true for 30 years. They want to portray it as a consumer choice, a menu of options. Giving in on the point that “everyone” should be covered puts it in the “rights” column and they don’t want it there.

@Major Major Major Major: Stuff I am tired of reading on Balloon Juice
1. Obamacare is Republican
2. Bannon is going to eat us all in our sleep
3. We are never going to have elections again
4.Hillary Clinton was a bad candidate
5.Democrats should have pushed for single payer.
………

Anbang was created in 2004 as an insurance company in China. Its ownership is opaque and it is currently on a spending binge, buying real estate throughout the world.

The firm’s activities created suspicion and concern in the Obama administration. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) objected to Anbang’s bid to buy Hotel del Coronado near San Diego, citing national security concerns. The hotel shares a peninsula with a Navy base.

After Anbang bought the Waldorf hotel in New York, Obama broke tradition and stayed elsewhere when he visited the city due to “security, counterintelligence and cybersurveillance concerns.”

Actor Kal Penn shared photos of old scripts for auditions and roles he has done to his Twitter on Tuesday, making a point about racialized stereotypes in Hollywood perceptions and portrayals of South Asian and Middle Eastern characters.

The scripts include characters named “Ghandi lookalike,” and another called “Foreign student.” Penn noted, “Ha! In this audition for Smart Guy, they didn’t even give the character a name!”

@Baud: They didn’t go all-in on a mandate-subsidies-guaranteed issue framework because of Susan Collins, they did so because it’s the bill they wanted and could agree on. Even the House couldn’t cobble together a decent public option.

6. 2018 elections will solve all our problems.
7. Fascist Behavior by Trump can be solved by the magical power of protesting!
8. Just because the Republicans have power means they will still play by the rules to change power when it comes time for them to step down.

ETA: “So what?” In our crappy binary political system, the implicit notion is that Obamacare is the desired end state of health care policy if it isn’t the Republican plan (and it isn’t!). That was my point.

@Kay: You know how the British made inroads in India? By giving the local rulers huge bribes and asking for monopoly trading rights. Of course that morphed into getting paid to protect the local royalty. Till one day they had no use for them and decided to rule directly instead. Republicans better be careful.

Gorsuch’s dissent in TransAm Trucking has drawn some unadmiring scrutiny in recent weeks. An Associated Press article last month described the opinion as one that appears to “defy common sense and fairness,” while the progressive Constitutional Accountability Center asserted in a white paper issued Friday that Gorsuch’s “crabbed interpretation” of the law was “anything but a fair reading of a statute enacted to protect worker and public safety.”

Realistically, nothing seems likely to derail Gorsuch’s nomination at this point. He has the votes and, truth be told, he is qualified for the post in terms of credentials and experience.

But Judge Gorsuch’s rulings do highlight the stark disconnect between Trump’s populist campaign rhetoric and the gated-community elitism of his first High Court nominee.

@Jacel: McConnell is the craftiest bastard on Capitol Hill at the moment. He has managed to keep his filthy fingerprints off this, which pisses me off. I’m sure behind the scenes, he’s not innocent at all.

For six or seven years, Republicans promised to repeal and/or replace the ACA.

I think the GOP just talked about repealing Obamacare. They did not give much thought to what a replacement might be like. The main thing was to show that they were going to stand up to and oppose Obama.

Later, Trump came along and sang a song of “repeal and replace” promising that his solution would be bigger and better than anything with Obama’s name on it.

What they’ve come up with seems to be largely stale crap that Ryan had in his back pocket. It’s got his Randian principles all over it like stink on a skunk.

Actually, at the moment, I’m listening to McConnell in a few clips on NPR’s “All Things Considered.” He’s towing the party line, focusing more on the lower taxes theme. I’m sure he’ll be more up front if and when the bill hits the Senate.

@Major Major Major Major: They don’t mean that it was proposed by the Heritage Foundation as an alternative to Hillarycare in 1993, and put into place in Massachusetts by Mitt Romney?

I agree that it’s probably the best we could have gotten, given the political make-up of the country (and that the Heritage Foundation wasn’t serious about it when they put it forward as an alternative, they just wanted a thing to pound Hillarycare with).

I think the reality is that Obamacare was a kludge. Who gives a fvk if it reflects some RomneyCare aspects or was meant at one moment to have enticed an unwinnable Maine preener.
It was an ugly kludge of efforts that, under any but modern GOP scorched earth politics, would have been tinkered and adjusted and improved along the past 7 years. It got us farther than we were, and thank g-d for that.

Now even the kludge might be dashed to bits, and that needs to be averted as much as humanly possible.

OK, I’m off to buy & cook dinner for my working man, and stop being quite so damn obsessed with my computer screen. Later….

According to an address to Congress by then-President Bill Clinton on September 22, 1993, the proposed bill would provide a “health care security card” to every citizen that would irrevocably entitle him or her to medical treatment and preventative services, including for pre-existing conditions.

To achieve this, the Clinton health plan required each US citizen and permanent resident alien to become enrolled in a qualified health plan on his or her own or through programs mandated to be offered by businesses with more than 5,000 full-time employees. Subsidies were to be provided to those too poor to afford coverage, including complete subsidies for those below a set income level. Users would choose plans offered by regional health alliances to be established by each state. These alliances would purchase insurance coverage for the state’s residents and could set fees for doctors who charge per procedure. The act provided funding to be sent to the states for the administration of the plan, beginning at $14 billion in 1993 and reaching $38 billion in 2003.

The plan also specified which benefits must be offered; a National Health Board to oversee the quality of health care services; enhanced physician training; the creation of model information systems; federal funding in the case of the insolvency of state programs; rural health programs; long-term care programs; coverage for abortions, with a “conscience clause” to exempt practitioners with religious objections; malpractice and antitrust reform; fraud prevention measures; and a prescription drug benefit for Medicare, among other features.

We have one dentist in the county who takes Medicaid patients and that’s all he takes. They pay 45 a procedure. He has really low overhead and is just billing one entity. He seems to be doing okay. 45 is low though. He’d have to do some volume.

@Raoul: What was so bad about Romney Care? It worked quite well in Massachusetts, we had the lowest # of uninsured people prior to ACA. I don’t know about the statistics right now. It was not a garbage plan like the one Ryan is proposing.

I wouldn’t assume they are Trump voters. Most voters in this county are Trump voters but I would bet most Medicaid recipients in this county don’t vote at all. The person I’m thinking of was housekeeping at the hospital. She has bad knees so waited until she was eligible for the lowest pay-out on Social Security (62) and stopped working. That left her with a 3 year gap before Medicare. She simply couldn’t do manual work anymore and let’s be real, no one is training a 62 year old to do office work.

@Kay: I hope he’s not doing unnecessary work. Too many dentists try that. I remember many years ago, a dentist telling me I had a cavity behind my front tooth. He offered to fill it. I declined. Later, a second opinion revealed… no cavity.

One good bit of news, at least if my impressions of the reporting and discussions of Don’tCare are correct: everyone’s focused on the single most simple, soundbyte-able concept: 24 million uninsured people. Seems like that’s all 75% of the population is hearing about this, and therefore that’s what everyone’s judging it by, and Price and Ryan and whoever else banging on about how other things in there will fix or minimize that problem or somehow overshadow it are not working. Nuance doesn’t sell, much to the chagrin of Democrats most of the time. 24 million uninsured; 55,000+ more uninsured in every Congressional district; tens of thousands needlessly dead for a tax cut. That sells. Kind of like “death panels” sold, sadly.

@bystander: She’s Olberman’s “partner” and her dad is the transgender person who was a news helicopter pilot in LA for the Rodney King and OJ Simpson actions. She (her dad) is very interesting in the OJ Documentary.

”
In July 2015, while on Dr. Drew On Call talking about Caitlyn Jenner accepting the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, attorney and former Breitbart editor-at-large Ben Shapiro questioned her genetics and called Tur “sir,” to which Tur responded by grabbing the back of Shapiro’s neck and telling him to stop or he would be going home in an ambulance. Shapiro filed a police report charging Tur with battery regarding the incident, and said that he intended to press charges.[26]”

Perhaps because I usually encounter it in Paul Krugman columns, I have always thought “Obamacare is just Romneycare is just Heritagecare” was addressed to middle-of-the-roaders as a way of highlighting Republican hypocrisy: “Hey, this plan has its roots among Republicans! The Republicans just have their knickers in a twist out of pure partisan spite, normal people can relax about it.”

The LGM and Lemieux articles cited above seem to be responding to it as an argument in the mouths of purity ponies who thought it wasn’t good enough to support. I’m afraid I wasn’t paying attention to that argument, since … well, if Romneycare was the best Massachusetts could do, I didn’t think we’d be able to get much better nationally.

@NR: The ‘centerpiece’ as you call it is only the centerpiece as far as public sentiment is concerned. In the actual mechanics of the law, it’s a trade-off for things like coverage of pre-existing conditions. Everyone was so focused on the mandate that nobody ever said, “Here’s what you get in return.”

I wanted single payer, but the troubles with the website show that would have been a really big mistake. Obamacare really turned around the death spiral that U.S. health care was in. I think the insurance companies realized that it was possible under that framework that they might be replaced. People don’t really realize how bad things were, I think if Trumpcare goes through they might see how terrifying it can be.

Stuff I am tired of reading on Balloon Juice
1. Obamacare is Republican
2. Bannon is going to eat us all in our sleep
3. We are never going to have elections again
4.Hillary Clinton was a bad candidate
5.Democrats should have pushed for single payer.

@KG: Republicans love to obstruct but don’t know how to actually govern. Here we have another blazing example of this with Republicans rejecting the ACA and voting to repeal it multiple times, all while never having a replacement.

I’m tired of reading and hearing about the handwringing of Trump voters or just plain old disinformed heartland Republicans but I think the current articles and interviews now 50 days into the Trump regime might turn out to be useful. They sound a bit different than Frank Luntz type panels before the election. People are showing less confidence in Trump promises as at BS/Chris Hayes thing in WVA this week. The heartland folks do love to get paid attention to for one thing but the other is that they are able to talk out about their issues like the opioid tragedies and how they are getting no help and no money. Maybe, just maybe, they are connecting dots and willing to learn more.

In Battle Creek, Jerome Patterson, 62, is driving past as I approach a church in the black part of town. He stops to warn me of the unchained and unleashed dogs in the neighborhood. He has been living in Battle Creek since 1972, except for time in the army. He is happy to talk, but initially won’t let me take his photo. “Shit, no! Black men don’t trust pictures for good reason. The police and reporters disrespect us.”

I ask him about politics and Trump. “Most of the men I know didn’t vote. Nobody had the spirit this time. Trump or Hillary? Doesn’t make much difference. Things out here gonna stay the same. We had high hopes for Obama. But nothing changed. Blacks here didn’t end up being helped by him. I mean, he might have tried, but his hands were tied by both parties. Lots of us are just so frustrated. Nobody had the spirit.”

“Didn’t vote”. “Didn’t have the spirit”. We have to find a way to change that. And I think we have to try to listen and understand in order to find that way.

Not that there’s a thing wrong with it, but ABC might have done a bit of a double take if John had said “I miss Steve.”

I can’t really argue with that reasoning. However, I also don’t think Steve understands (yet) the finer points of human male-female relationships. But he certainly has a great teacher from whom to learn.

… A new industry-backed bill would produce a wholesale elimination of most enforcement of longstanding laws and rules put in place over many years — as a result of hundreds of deaths — to protect the health and safety of West Virginia’s coal miners.

Opponents are furious about the proposed changes but also fearful that backers of the bill could easily have the votes to push through any language they want. Longtime mine safety experts and advocates are shocked at the breadth of the attack on current authorities of the state Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training and the Board of Coal Mine Health and Safety.

The house is fully engulfed in flame, the residents filled it with coal and lit it up because black man and the Three Stooges bucket brigade showed up with no water, no buckets and no plan. Run in and rescue them? Screw you.

Republicans aren’t interested in providing a solution to the problem in the first place.

x1000. This is the point I always go back to in discussions of the politics of health care reform. The Republicans controlled both Houses during the Clinton administration, and they controlled both Houses and the Presidency during the Bush II administration. If they had placed any priority on passing HCR legislation, they had plenty of time to bring it up. That they didn’t should be taken as a sign that they don’t want to pass HCR. The only reason they have ever put forward any kind of HCR plan is as a worse alternative to Democratic plans.

A new industry-backed bill would produce a wholesale elimination of most enforcement of longstanding laws and rules put in place over many years — as a result of hundreds of deaths — to protect the health and safety of West Virginia’s coal miners.

Forgive my lack of technosophisticocompetence, but is there supposed to be any sound with that? It’s funny as fuck just with the visual, but if there’s an audio track my iPad isn’t picking it up at all.

@Baud:
You act as if you don’t understand your opponent. When he said he was going to campaign hard for Tryancare, he meant it, then it got panned by everyone including the base, so he never said that, you just think he said he’d support it because the lying media reported that fake news. Twitler cannot be cornered, it’s just you misunderstanding what he says or not getting the joke, sarcasm, english, it’s you not him.

One guy at Sanders thing in WVA said he doesn’t know much about politics but I think he voted for Trump. I’m just hoping that some of them will start to pay more attention, study the candidates and check how their legislators are voting instead of just getting their info/myths from their neighbors and wingnut media. Probably not though.

Well that was fun, my internets went out yesterday and my home automation hub wouldn’t reconnect. I had to reset it, so 2 of the lights, the thermostat, and the door locks stopped working(there’s a manual override for the locks). So I’ve spent the better part of the last two days getting everything synched back up again.
#FirstWorldProblems

Intresting bit of speculation how Narcassist in Chief is going to take the AHRA failing after it’s been labeled Trumpcare. The bit about Bannon and Brienbart splitting with the White House sounds like blamestorm has already started. I suspect a major Twitter freakout at Ryan and the House over health care maybe in the future.

Makes one wonder if the Russian invistigation, Trumpcare failure and his tanking popularity will be to much for Trump and he will just sulks off to his Florida House, isolates himself there and refuses to govern to punish the country.

is not stupid. And Reince, while a chinless quivver of enabling shit, does know his way around D.C.
So, I’d say the clusterfuck is at the senior staff level. That the figurehead is Max Headroom stupid doesn’t matter that much.

Assumes facts not in evidence.

Bannon is an evil moron, you have to be stupid to believe you can turn back the clock and make America and other western nations homogenous.

Prius knows his way around the RNC, has never actually worked in government before, understanding conceptually and actually running the WH and trying to coordinate with the hill, very different. Throw in a toddler throwing tantrums every five minutes and you have a clusterfuck.

The rest of the staff are also newbies, so on them I agree with you.

The problem is they all believe that running government is easy and anyone can do it, turns out they were wrong. Now they’re all stuck in the deep end, none of them can swim and so far no one’s thrown then a rope.

I am getting too old for March snow with its density matched only by some imploding stars in galaxies far, far away. My wrist hurts, my knees really hurt, and I had a damn snowblower for a lot of the work. Fortunately, there’s wine.

@hovercraft: “The problem is they all believe that running government is easy and anyone can do it, turns out they were wrong. Now they’re all stuck in the deep end, none of them can swim and so far no one’s thrown then a rope.”

I think it’s more like Bannon flatters himself he’s the second coming of Machiavelli because he read an article on Conservapedia and watched all the Darth Vader scenes in Star Wars, so that makes him an expert, which is more than the rest who are just reciting the dogma of what ever conservative boutique subgroup they belong to.

None of them know how to govern because in their mind that’s what evil people like Democrats do. True Conservatives one and only job is to insult and harass everyone else for being different than them.

Do you mean during the campaign or over the past few days since the plan was announced?

If you look at the blathering and babbling Trump did about health care on the campaign trail about the only feasible health care plan that could fit his stated preferences and promises would be some form of universal health care system, perhaps modeled on Medicare for all. All his nonsense about covering everyone with cheaper, better care is never going to be accomplished using market forces.

He said today he expects it to pass. I only saw a clip, but I got the impression that was “pass the house.”
Tailgunner Teddy has now joined Lee and Cotton (so the wingnuttiest of wingnuts) saying the bill won’t pass.

In other news: My Sikh friend is afraid for her father to come and visit, he keeps the full beard and wears a turban. He is kinda frail because he just had a stroke. He was planing to visit this summer. Those plans are on hold now.

Yes, he did, after the new plan came out. Trump is so effing stupid he doesn’t realize that the Ryan plan couldn’t meet any of Trump’s stated preferences and promises except for tax cuts, which, of course, are incompatible with an affordable health care plan.

The truly amazing thing is that nothing Trump says, and I mean nothing, means anything at all. His statements have a half-life measured in microseconds. I’ve come to the conclusion that it is impossible to overstate what a complete idiot Trump is.

He’s not playing eleven dimensional chess; he’s playing Candyland in a parallel universe.

There is no fucking way in hell TRMS has Trump’s actual, useful, tax returns. None.
They would have Bri-Wi do a BREAKING NEWS special right fucking now if they had recent Trump tax returns.
Whatever Rachel has will be weaksauce.

The MSNBC host announced the news and then added a “seriously” — as if she knew we’d be immediately skeptical of anybody claiming they landed this long-sought scoop. The tweet suggested the tax returns would be revealed tonight on MSNBC at 9 p.m. ET.

Just the most Democratic and Progressive health care plan to pass Congress since, em, um, ahhhh, 1963? or so? Something like that. The most Democratic and Progressive health care plan in ummm, 45 years or so? About that, anyways.

People poor mouthing the best health care plan – the ONLY health care plan – in two generations need to get a grip. With some tuning up, aimed at improving coverage rather than aimed at breaking it and lowering taxes, it could be right up there with the best health care plans in the world.

The Swiss have pretty good health care, with private health insurance, don’t they?

Apparently the tax returns are not Maddow’s but came to David Cay Johnston, former Times reporter who, like others of his ilk, has become kind of a free-lance radical since leaving the paper. He’s a serious guy. If he has something, it’s not nothing. That doesn’t mean it’s the page with “Received from V, Putin” on it, but I don’t think he’d push this out if it weren’t important in his mind, and he’s a tax expert.

Honestly, I would love this to be a YUUUUGE story, but I’m mentally prepared for it to be a big nothingburger. That way, I won’t be disappointed, and if it’s anything more, I will be delightfully surprised.

chain of custody is an obvious questions. Then again realising a fake tax return with “Payments from V. Putin, for services to be rendered”, “Payment: hush money to underaged hookers” might just force Donny to relase the real thing.

I’d read somewhere that the Trumpcare bill would save the government approximately $3 billion in Social Security outlays, and that’s due to an additional 30k dead people per year in the 50-64 age bracket, starting in 2018. Trump’s playing with fire here, seeing as how he essentially won the election by 80k votes (electoral college). He’s basically decided to kill off his base – if most of those 90k dead from 2018 – 2020 die in Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, etc. there goes his margin.

Why do people seem to think a tax filing would show a fucking 1099 from the kremlin or something, anyway? I don’t know how exactly Russia hands you a suitcase full of cash but I also don’t think they handed Trump a suitcase full of cash.

Josh Barro Retweeted Jennifer Ablan
Huh. So they can get this stuff out quickly when they feel like it.
Jennifer AblanVerified account @ jennablan
14-Mar-2017 08:29:23 PM – WHITE HOUSE SAYS IN RESPONSE TO MSNBC THAT TRUMP PAID $38 MILLION IN TAXES ON INCOME OF $150 MILLION

@Corner Stone:
If I lift my no cable except Joy boycott and this is a big nothingburger, I will be pissed. I’ll give her the A block, but this better be the real deal, not some copy of his 1979 tax return that tells us nothing relevant to what he’s been doing the last few years.

@hovercraft: Protect your born again weergin eyeballs! This is going to be interesting but nothing more useful than the segment she did when Russian billionaires bought shit from Trump for more blah blah than it was blah blahed at the time.

Where you say “…He’s towing the party line… ” towing means pulling. What you mean to say is probably toeing the line, as in standing in line straight with your toes on that line the CO drew on the ground… those Marines are toeing the line. Mitch is toeing the Republican line.

@schrodingers_cat: A shaman will tell Peter Thiel that the gray hair of old people holds the secrets of eternal youth, so we olds (not we meaning you olds because you are not an old so am employing rhetorical you here) will be forced into homes for the demographically irrelevant so our gray hairs can be harvested until they’re gone then we’re sent to the Soylent Center for final disposition. The End. (At least we will be served all you can eat doughnut holes).

@p.a.: We only got about 2 inches here in NoVA, but it was heavy as hell. Hubby was home for a change but working while I went out to start shoveling our 75′ driveway. I was about 1/4 done when a couple of young guys came by and said they’d finish for $60. I took them up on the offer and they did a terrific job including the big flat area at the top of the drive, sidewalk leading to the front door and front stoop.

It let me go inside to make short ribs and brussels sprouts for dinner along with a lovely Chimney Rock cabernet. Life is good chez Singerman.

@MomSense: Sikhs have been through so much. My friend’s family were refugees from Pakistan. She is from Delhi. There was Operation Blue Star, then Rajiv Gandhi’s goons went after the capital’s Sikhs after Indira Gandhi’s assassination. And now this.

Sorry, Baud, I didn’t finish the comment above, I had to do some errands.

I agree that Trump has praised the House plan, but he’s an idiot and when he started saying how great it was he probably had no idea what was even in the bill. The lesson with Trump is that nothing he says means anything. It not only can change, it will change because it’s not rooted in any core beliefs.

They could have handed Trump a bill that called for executing everyone on Medicaid and he would have gushed over what a great plan it was and how it would provide “care” (yeah, a lethal injection) for everyone and it would be cheaper and blah, blah, blah.

Trump’s profound idiocy makes it almost impossible for journalists to cover him because he’s always changing what he says and he’s utterly unconcerned by charges of flip-flops or hypocrisy. He simply denies ever saying what the video/audio clips prove he said or he claims the reporters are lying and it never stops.

So, yes, you were right, Trump has been praising the Ryan plan. My initial comment was meant to point out that if you went back to the campaign and looked at what Trump said he wanted and what he promised, the only plan that would have met his criteria would be some form of universal plan that eliminated for-profit insurance companies and employer-based insurance.

I have no idea what you mean. I stated an opinion and not a fact, so proving my opinion wrong is not meaningful. Of course I could be wrong, but from the evidence I have and continue to gather every day, I stand by my conclusion.

If what you mean is that somewhere on the Internet there is a statement that proves and disproves everything…I won’t argue with that.

@dm: I have no problem with trying understand why someone did not vote but I am tired of the endless repetition of T voters and their concerns regarding economic anxiety. Besides, don’t let me stop you from expressing your opinion, after all I is just another kitteh on the intertoobz.